Disclaimer:
This story is based on characters and situations created and owned by
JK Rowling, various publishers including but not limited to
Bloomsbury Books, Scholastic Books and Raincoast Books, and Warner
Bros., Inc. No money is being made and no copyright or trademark
infringement is intended.
Author Notes: Welcome to the
ride. . . Reviews, comments, suggestions are all welcome and so are
criticism and flames – I'll rise to the challenge.
For
Cruisers: No ships sailing yet in this fic, but bear in mind that
this fic will invariably lead to H/Hr (thanks to the hopeless HMS
Pumpkin-pier in me!)
Dedicated to the die-hard HP Fan-fiction
readers and writers all over the world. Fandom rules!!!
Harry Potter and
The Sacred Alliance
Chapter 1
It was a hot July afternoon in Little Whinging, as a skinny
bespectacled underage wizard with untidy jet-black hair was doing
something no wizard would ever do – watching television. If you
count dozing off on the couch in front of The Matrix, mouth
falling open, as watching television. Rarely did Harry Potter ever
get the whole of Number 4, Privet Drive to himself without being
locked alone in his bedroom or, more likely, in the cupboard under
the stairs.
Having to visit a wedding ceremony in London,
Harry's uncle and aunt, Vernon and Petunia Dursley, remembering
Moody's warning, were forced to leave him alone in the house. A very
reluctant Dudley had gone too, although he would have preferred to
pick up another fight with the gang from the neighboring locality.
Free to do whatever he wanted for the evening, Harry had decided to
spend the time watching the Muggle movie The Matrix from
Dudley's DVD collection, if not for the Muggle paranoia surrounding
the film, then at least to keep his mind free of other things. Unlike
the normal teenager wizard who worried over school results, girls,
the Quidditch League, brooms and so on, Harry Potter had to cope with
much more. The recent happenings in the wizarding world. The rise of
Voldemort. The prophecy. Sirius. Harry tried his best to keep these
thoughts away during daytime (As if the nightly doses in
nightmares weren't enough!) by scrutinizing the Daily Prophet,
reading up his school books, completing his homework and indulging in
Muggle hobbies like reading fiction. Hermione really ought to be
impressed, he had thought.
"Alohomora!"
The
front door of the house, which had been twice locked by the Dursleys,
burst open, jerking Harry awake from his peaceful slumber, which was
itself a rarity in the life of Harry Potter. The dream had been of a
martial-expert-Harry tackling dozens of suit-wearing Death Eaters
with a gun shooting laser bolts looking remarkably like stunning
spells, all mind controlled by the artificial intelligence known as
You-Know-Who. Shaking of the dream, Harry stopped for a moment to
wonder why the heroine was looking like a cross between Cho and
Hermione (What the hell am I dreaming of!?) before he
remembered the source of the interruption.
Not expecting the
Dursleys to be back so soon, Harry cautiously went over to the front
door, wand out. A tired-looking middle-aged man with light brown
hair, flecked with gray, was standing at the door, the wand that had
opened the door held in an out-stretched hand.
Harry gaped in
surprise before blurting out, "Lupin!?"
Remus
Lupin had taught Defense Against the Dark Arts to Harry's class in
Hogwarts before he was sacked when it got out that he was a
were-wolf. He had also been a close friend of Harry's father James
and Sirius Black. Beside him stood another ex-DADA teacher, 'Mad-Eye'
Moody, who had spent the major part of Harry's fourth year at
Hogwarts locked in a trunk, while an impostor disguised as him taught
his classes.
"Hello Harry, how are you doing?"
Lupin
tried to smile, but barely succeeded. Harry guessed that Lupin, like
himself, wasn't taking the loss of Sirius, in addition to the turmoil
that the wizarding world was in, well. Moody, unsurprisingly, didn't
even attempt a smile.
"Evening Potter! A good idea to
keep that wand out. We are taking you Mrs. Figg's house,"
growled Moody, his magical eye taking in each-inch of the Dursleys'
house.
"So why are you here?" said Harry.
"This
place is not secure lately . . ." Lupin answered.
"But
Dumbledore said that this house is safe!"
"Of
course it is! But once you are outside the compound, you're on your
own," said Moody.
"Harry, there has been an
attack, but we cannot say much here," added Lupin in a low
voice. "We'll explain at Mrs. Figg's. We'll have enough time
until your aunt and uncle return."
"But first . .
." said Moody gruffly, tapping his wand over Harry, "I'm
going to Disillusion you."
Harry felt a familiar
sensation as if a cold liquid was trickling down his body. A moment
later he found himself taking the exact appearance of whatever was
behind him.
"OK follow me, Harry, while Moody will take
up the rear."
Harry did as he was told, wondering
sulkingly why two grown-up escorts were required to accompany him for
the short walk to old Mrs. Figg's house. As if he couldn't take care
of himself. But his thoughts soon traveled to Mrs. Arabella Figg's
house, which he hadn't visited for the past few years. He used to
spend his holidays there at a younger age when the Dursleys went away
in vacation.
The house looked same as before, old and slightly
battered. Mrs. Figg, a batty old squib, was talking animatedly with
one of her pet cats, whom she called 'Mr. Tibbles'. She greeted Harry
with a warm smile.
"Hello Mrs. Figg. Er . . . I never
thanked you for standing as witness for me in the hearing . . ."
Harry greeted her, unsure of what to say.
"Don't mention
it Harry! Your mother was a very good friend of mine . . . a fine
young lady she was," at this she started sniffing into a
handkerchief. Harry did not feel like continuing the
conversation.
He couldn't have even if he wanted to, since to
his astonishment, he found the face of the headmaster of Hogwarts,
Albus Dumbledore, smiling at him from the fireplace. Harry had been
very much enraged by Dumbledore's attitude towards him and Sirius the
year before, which were in fact intended to protect them. He was a
little ashamed of the outburst that this had culminated to in
Dumbledore's office, with Harry practically demolishing the office in
his anger.
Dumbledore was currently giving instructions to
Lupin and Moody. Harry caught something about Ministry officials
being present in the area and Mundungus Fletcher being in hospital,
before Moody, Lupin and Figg exited from the front door ("See
you later Harry!"), leaving him alone with Dumbledore's
head.
"Good evening Harry. I assume you have calmed
since our – ah – discussion in my office last
month."
Dumbledore's eyes lacked the nearly ever-present
twinkle, which, Harry thought, was either due to some grave crisis
that had just taken place, or because he was disappointed with
Harry's behavior. Harry sincerely hoped it was the first reason, and
then mentally kicked himself for such selfish thinking.
"Hello
Professor. I am sorry for loosing my temper like that . . ."
"No
Harry, I am the one who should apologize for keeping you uninformed.
But I am here to discuss more urgent matters. As you may have guessed
from my conversation with Remus and Alastor, there has been a Death
Eater attack on Mundungus when he was on his way to Little Whinging
from London. He managed to escape but it seems that they knew he was
in charge of your protection. Ministry Aurors have stationed in your
area to be on the lookout for Death Eaters."
Harry
gulped as Dumbledore paused for the news to sink in. If the Daily
Prophet was to be believed, this had to be the first Death Eater
attack after the skirmish in the Department of Mysteries three weeks
ago. But that brought back memories of Sirius' death, so Harry shut
that thought out. At least this explained why he had been escorted by
Lupin and Moody. But he hadn't seen any Aurors, so they must be under
Disillusionment charms, he thought, as he was now under. Or
Invisibility Cloaks.
"But how did Fletcher escape?"
asked Harry.
"As you know, Mundungus is a member of the
Order. We have methods of knowing when a member is under attack from
the enemy which Voldemort didn't know of. I contacted Fudge, who
apparated ministry Aurors to the location. Since the Death Eaters
were few – they do not generally come out before the dark –
Mundungus was able to defend himself until the Aurors arrived."
"But
why . . ."
"You must understand Harry, that time
is running short and I'm sure your questions will be answered when
the time comes. You may have remembered that Voldemort failed in
possessing you for long in the Ministry hall. The power that drove
him out also diminished his Legilimency powers, but he will regain
them soon. Hence it is of utmost importance that you are capable of
Occlumency before he recovers his former ability to delve into your
mind.
"From what Professor Snape has informed me, I
gather that you can fight off the Legilimency curse on your own,
which similar to resisting the Imperious curse. But it is important
to learn to clear your mind of all thoughts – this prevents the
curse from affecting you when your consciousness is weak, like when
you are asleep, when it is not possible to resist. Unlike what you
think, this will not stop you from experiencing Voldemort's true
emotions, unless he himself practices Occlumency. Occlumency is
similar to what Muggles call Meditation. It will shut off your own
feelings from Voldemort and prevent any magical influence including
forced visions from reaching your mind."
That was news
to Harry. "You mean if I practiced Occlumency, I'd still have
seen myself as the snake attacking Mr. Weasley?"
"Yes
you would, unless Voldemort was able to prevent it from reaching you
by practicing Occlumency himself." Dumbledore smiled.
"Occlumency will not seal your mind from true visions. You will
have to practice clearing your mind of all thoughts. You can do this
twice a day – once before you sleep at night and again just
after you wake up in the morning. This will also help in having
dreamless sleep, which I daresay you are lacking very much."
Harry
nodded. He would give anything to stop the dreams that he witnessed
in his sleep. He would have mentally cursed Snape for not explaining
Occlumency to him, but caught himself as he remembered that anger,
even directed towards Snape, would only cloud his mind.
"Now
I have other matters to attend to," Dumbledore broke into
Harry's thoughts. "I expect you will take this practice
seriously."
"I promise I will Professor."
"Your
aunt and uncle will be back in a short time. Remus and Alastor are
waiting for you outside to accompany you back to your house. I know
you may dislike this, but you must not roam outside your house alone
especially after dark, as the protection that runs through you and
your aunt's blood is only effective inside the house."
Harry
knew the protection Dumbledore was referring to; it was the result of
his mother sacrificing her life in order to protect him from
Voldemort when he was baby. It was the reason Dumbledore had insisted
Harry to stay in his aunt Petunia Dursley's house (who was his
mother's only alive blood relation) during summer, even though the
Dursleys' disliked him with all their heart.
A major part of
Harry's anger and frustration, that was directed towards Dumbledore
and Harry's friends the year before, was the direct result of him
being stuck in the Dursleys' house all summer without a drop of news
from the wizarding world.
But if the weeks after Sirius' death
brought a change in Harry, then that was in controlling his temper.
He perfectly knew the danger in roaming the streets after dark –
only last year he and his cousin Dudley had almost been soul-sucked
by two Dementors right there in Little Whinging. And the recent
attack on Mundungus Fletcher only aggravated the risks.
"I
understand, Professor" was all he could say.
Harry
caught a flicker in Dumbledore's eyes as his head left the fireplace
– unless mistaken, Harry could only recognize it as pride.
* * *
Two days passed since Harry's meeting
with Dumbledore. The digital clock on the desk read 11:45 PM. Harry
was staring blankly, quill in hand, at a 3 foot long parchment under
a lamp-shade, empty except a bold heading that read "USES OF
METALS IN POTIONS AND THEIR EFFECTS". However, Potions where
the last things on his mind.
' . . . and either must die at
the hand of the other for neither can live while the other survives .
. .' The words of the prophecy still burnt like fire in his memory.
It did explain a lot of things to Harry – why Voldemort had
tried to kill him while he was a baby – his destiny was to kill
Voldemort or to die in the attempt. '. . . and the Dark Lord will
mark him as his equal, but he will have power the Dark Lord knows not
. . .' What power did he have that could he have that Voldemort
didn't?
Dumbledore had mentioned a force, locked somewhere
in the Department of Mysteries, that was more wonderful than human
intelligence, more powerful than the forces of nature, and more
terrible than death. It was this force that had saved Harry from
Voldemort possessing him. Harry drooled, pondering over the nature of
this elusive force; his Potions essay lay untouched.
Harry
suddenly found himself in a deserted alley, bordered by lamp posts,
none of which were glowing. From the square houses that surrounded
the alley, Harry judged that it was a Muggle neighborhood. The were
was an eerie quietness in the moonlit atmosphere. Apparently it was
very late into the night. No lights were lit in any of the
houses.
Harry had never seen this place before, yet he somehow
knew where to go. He moved – but he wasn't walking – he
was slithering. He could feel his fangs, dripping with poison.
Adrenaline pumping with excitement through his veins, he swiftly
neared the house. He needed to get inside the house. He proceeded
towards the door – there were letters on the nameplate –
they somehow sounded familiar – GRANGER.
The scar on
Harry's forehead exploded with piercing pain. He abruptly brought up
his hand to cover his scar, but in the darkness his hand came in
contact with the bulb socket of the lamp instead, giving him a nasty
electric shock, which doubled the pain in his scar. A moment later
electric power to the whole of Little Whinging was cutoff.
For
a few seconds Harry groped about in the darkness, trying to recover
from his trance, until his eyes adjusted to the darkness in his
bedroom. Harry was sure that the vision he had seen was for real –
the feeling was exactly the same as that he had while seeing the
attack on Mr. Weasley. Hermione and her parents were in danger; he
had to contact Dumbledore without wasting a second.
Harry
tried to keep his head cool and think (which required quite an effort
considering his scar was still screaming with pain) . . . An owl
would take too much time . . . but he could go to Mrs. Figg's –
it would take less than a minute if he ran. Grabbing his wand, Harry
quietly rushed down to the main door, making sure the Dursleys were
asleep. They were sound sleepers – a power failure in the
middle of the night had little effect on their slumber. Harry guessed
that it was well past midnight.
Silently opening the front
door, Harry ran as fast as he could towards Mrs. Figg's house without
creating a racket. Devoid of electricity, Privet Drive was plunged
into darkness, somewhat similar to what he had seen in the vision.
Harry narrowly missed bumping headlong into a lamp-post. The streets
were empty of any sign of life.
Although it was difficult in
the darkness, Harry finally reached Mrs. Figg's house and knocked on
the door. He waited for ten seconds before knocking again. Still no
answer. He was getting impatient. He knocked thrice more, louder each
time, pressing his ears onto the door, but could not hear any
movement. The emotion that gripped Harry could be described in one
word – PANIC. God Dammit! Think straight, he pleaded
with his brain, which was currently having the direction sense of a
bat trapped in a rock concert hall.
In a moment, he made up
his mind. He'd have to go to the Granger's house himself. He quickly
made his way back to 4, Privet Drive, examining his plan for flaws.
He'd already broken his word to Dumbledore about not venturing out of
the Dursleys' house after dark. If there were Death Eaters lurking
about, then they would have already come for him.
Coming back
to his bedroom, Harry grabbed his school bag, which always contained
his money bag, invisibility cloak and map, put in his broom –
he didn't know why he needed it, but took it nevertheless – and
ran out stealthily to the street. The Dursleys' undisturbed snores
still filled the house.
Time was running out . . . at least
five minutes had passed since he had woken up. Not knowing exactly
what to do, Harry held out his wand meekly, as if hailing a cab –
an action that would have been quite normal to a Muggle observer, if
not for the fact that the street was practically deserted of cabs, or
for that matter, any human presence. Just when Harry was about to
give up, a starkly purple colored triple-decker bus appeared out of
thin air in front of him, 'The Knight Bus' written in gold letters
over its windshield.
"Welcome to the Knight Bus,
emergency transport for the stranded witch or wizard. Stan Shunpike
at you ser . . . Oi! If it ain't young Harry Potter . . ." the
conductor began. From his previous experiences, Harry knew that
calling Stan 'talkative' would be an understatement.
"Hello
Stan," Harry said, showing him Hermione's address in a slip of
paper, "I need to get here urgently. I'm willing to pay higher
for a really quick trip."
Stan read the slip, muttering
something than sounded like "Muggle address" and handed
it over to the driver.
"No problem Harry, come on
aboard! We have just one other passenger, you see business is . . .
"
"How much?" Harry cut him off again,
climbing aboard, while the bus started with a jerk. Harry paid the
required galleons and sat in a chair, glancing at his Muggle
wrist-watch in his impatience to count off the seconds. However, the
second hand was not moving at all. Just what I needed now –
my watch getting stuck. Frustrated, he was about to ask Stan the
time, before he remembered that wizards generally didn't wear
personal Muggle time-pieces – students being an exception. He'd
worry about his malfunctioning watch later.
The trip to the
Granger's house, which would have taken more than an hour on Muggle
transport, took a little more than a minute – partly because
the roads were empty, but mostly due to the fact that the bus
apparated most of the way. The driver seemed to have taken Harry's
extra pay to heart. Yet, on reaching his destination, Harry was
forced to fight away the disquieting thought that he could be too
late.
All the street lights were off, just as Harry had seen
in his vision; a large power blackout seemed to have occurred –
but Harry had other worries to ponder upon. He scrutinized his
surroundings, trying to relate them with his vision, which was tough
job considering that the vision was from the point of view of a
snake, the darkness not helping the task at all. Eventually he
recognized the house that the snake had been heading for – it
was located just opposite the one he had been facing.
In a few
quick strides Harry reached the front door, his heart beating madly,
and his eyes caught the nameplate, shining in the moonlight bearing
the words "Granger". So far the vision was corresponding
with reality. But so had been the vision about Sirius in the
Department of Mysteries . . . Doubts formed in his mind if this was
just another of Voldemort's tricks . . . But then why hadn't he been
attacked yet? Brushing off his thoughts aside, Harry concentrated on
the task at hand.
For a moment, Harry contemplated searching
the house compound for slithering creatures – but if there had
been a snake then it would have found an opening into the house by
now. A picture flashed into his mind of a poisonous snake crawling on
a bed. Trying his best to ignore it, Harry knocked sharply on the
door and waited. This knocking business, brought about by the lack of
electricity, was getting to his nerves.
No reply came.
Swearing under his breath, Harry knocked louder. No movement . . .
just when he was about to consider using magic to force open the door
he heard someone walking inside. His heart gave a leap of relief as
the door opened to reveal a middle-aged man holding a candle. It took
a few moments for Harry to recognize Mr. Granger in the flickering
candle-light, whom he had last seen at King's Cross.
"Yes??"
There
was an edge to Mr. Granger's voice which instantly made Harry feel
guilty for disturbing them in the middle of the night for a vision he
realized might just be a hoax.
"Hello Mr. Granger, er .
. . I'm Hermione's friend from school, Harry Potter."
Harry
felt Mr. Granger's scrutinizing gaze before he caught a look of
recognition grazing the man's eyes. He thanked his stars that
Muggle's didn't read the Daily Prophet. He wouldn't have rejoiced at
the idea of Hermione's parents thinking they were anything more than
friends.
"Who is it dear?" came a woman's voice,
which Harry guessed belonged to Hermione's mother, from above the
stairs.
"It's a friend of Hermione's", Mr. Granger
replied back before addressing Harry a little more warmly than
before, "Well good to see you Harry. Hermione speaks a lot
about you, but she's not here. What brings you here at this time of
the night?"
The fact that Hermione wasn't here was news
to Harry. But he stopped himself from wondering about her
whereabouts, as her absence meant that he would be alone in battling
the snake if he had to – he shivered at the thought – he
had tried to avoid thinking how he would tackle the snake on his own,
considering that it was being possessed by Voldemort, and it did not
help matters that underage wizards weren't allowed to do magic unless
it was a life threatening situation. Scratch that . . . unless the
ministry believed that it was a life threatening situation –
only the previous year Harry had to face a full-fledged trial for
expulsion from Hogwarts when he had used a Patronus charm to save his
cousin and himself from being soul-sucked by two Dementors.
"Well
. . . Mr. Granger, you might think that this is just a joke, but it's
not. This is really important – I've just had a vision of a
magical snake – it's possessed by Vol . . . well a dark lord –
Hermione may have told you about him. I saw the snake heading towards
your house in my vision. I tried to contact the school headmaster but
I couldn't. So I came here to warn you."
Harry now
wished that it would all turn out to be a mistake, foolhardy though
it might make him seem to Hermione's parents, and he could go back to
the Dursleys after saying his apologies.
"Hold on a
second – you're saying that there's a dangerous snake lurking
about here, and he's being controlled by a dark lord – do you
mean Voldemort?" Mr. Granger said coolly.
Harry nodded.
"Then Hermione must have told you about him. Please sir, you've
got to believe me . . . "
But as if on cue the
stillness was shattered by a scream from the above. The look of
coolness on Mr. Granger's face was instantly replaced by a look of
horror as he rushed towards what Harry made out to be the staircase
in the dim light. Harry followed suit, his heart pounding madly.
On
reaching upstairs, Harry held out his wand and whispered "Lumos".
This was a life-threatening situation enough – expulsion or no
expulsion. He gasped at the sight that met him – a 6 foot long
serpent was slowly crawling towards Mrs. Granger trapped in a corner
of the doorway. She looked petrified with shock.
Harry's scar
was throbbing madly, and this was nothing like the usual –
almost constant – irritation in the scar that he had been
experiencing ever since the Vodemort's redemption a year ago. This
extreme pain was something he only experienced when Voldemort –
or apparently a creature possessed by him – was nearby. It was
making thinking nearly impossible.
A few seconds elapsed
before Harry realized that he would have to divert attention of the
snake away before it struck at Mrs. Granger. Mr. Granger was having
no luck even after shouting at the top of his lungs. Then it came to
him – he was a Parselmouth. He concentrated at the snake before
opening his mouth to speak.
"Leave her alone! I'm the
one you want." he hissed.
The snake turned abruptly
towards Harry at the words, which were unintelligible to humans. Its
green eyes glittered eerily in the darkness. It slithered toward him
baring its fangs, which here dripping with venom.
"Well,
well well . . . how nice to see you Harry! Although your presence
here is not at all unexpected . . . in fact . . ." and the
snake broke off, a look of triumph gleaming in its eyes.
Harry
could have recognized that venomous tone anywhere. What did he
mean by expecting Harry?
"Voldemort," he spat,
still speaking in Parsel-tongue, "What do you –"
But he was cutoff by a sudden jerk as a strong hand clasped
his collar from behind.
"What do you think are you
doing, boy?" Mr. Granger growled.
Harry was taken aback
by the sudden hostility in his voice but regained his senses when he
realized how suspicious hissing to the snake looked – in his
second year all the students in school except Ron and Hermione had
believed him to be the Heir of Slytherin just because he could speak
Parsel-tongue.
He was about to come up with a convincing
response when several things happened in quick succession. The
green-eyed snake, taking full advantage of the chance offered to it,
lunged at Harry's wand arm. Harry barely managed to pull his hand out
of the way before its fangs sunk into his trousers, leaving an
intense stinging sensation just below his knee. Meanwhile Mr. Granger
had let go off Harry's collar and brought a glass vessel, which he
had been supposedly holding in his free hand, crashing down on the
snake's skull – or where it had been a moment ago as it
instantly veered away from the danger area.
Harry stared at
his right knee, as blood seeped out, socking his trousers. He pulled
up his trouser to inspect the wound, two deep circular marks made by
the poisonous fangs. He would have only a handful of minutes before
the poison spread through his bloodstream, which would surely be
fatal.
"See how these stupid Muggles treat you Harry?
You risk your life for them and what do they you pay in return? Join
me Harry and I'll make your life worthwhile." Voldemort was
enjoying the game.
"If you think I'll join you
Voldemort, then you probably need a mental check-up." Harry
hissed back through gritted teeth.
But a stab of excruciating
pain filled his right knee. He knew that he would have to be admitted
to St. Mungo's immediately, if he was to have a chance of
survival. He doubted if he'd reach a Muggle hospital in time, let
alone a wizarding one. Yet he couldn't give up now; if he did,
none of them would live. And then it struck him.
Not wasting a
second, Harry pulled out the pocket-knife Sirius had given him, and
sliced away the flesh around the wound, which was now bleeding
profusely. Trying his best to ignore the pain, Harry yelled "Stupefy!
Stupefy! STUPEFY!" But the snake expertly dodged all the
stunning spells emerging from Harry's wand. The next moment it turned
towards Mrs. Granger who, showing admirable courage, had almost
flattened its tail by a lamp-shade.
Harry knew this was his
chance. Working up all his concentration, he yelled "Impedimenta!"
The snake was blasted away a good three feet through the air, landing
in a heap in the corner opposite to the one Mrs. Granger was standing
in. Harry cautiously crept up to the snake, to be able to aim a
stunning spell. But the snake had not given up yet. Just as Harry got
within striking distance, it lunged straight for his throat, fangs
outstretched for the kill.
However, Harry was prepared this
time. His stunning spell hit the snake right in between its eyes and
it slumped to the ground harmlessly. It was then that he noticed the
dark red color that the right half of his trousers had taken before
he passed out.
